There is the text of an old parchment covered accounts
book found in the vestry of St Mary's Church containing the accounts of
various churchwardens between 1762 and 1901 and a short history of North Mymms
Park.

The site also has a number of features taken from the
North Mymms Local History Society's newsletters including the history of Water End School,
the building of the Great North Road,
the original sales brochure
when Brookmans Park was first put on the market as a place to live, the coming of the industrial
revolution and many more historical articles.

There is a fascinating work by Bill Killick on local place names,
how they changed and what they mean, along with his study of the name Moffats.

Two more works by Peter Kingsford record the social structure
in the area in Victorian times and the rise in poaching
caused by the depression in agriculture around 1836.

There are ten 'memories' of life in North Mymms
collected by the Local History Society including an oral history of the life of James Chuck,
born in 1903, the memories of Tom Nott
who was ten when the Boer War started, recollections of the air raids during the Great War
and how people got about before the
trains arrived.

There is a moving account of the arrival of war-time
evacuees from the east end of London and memories of when Moffats Lane was a farm road
and shopping was done on foot or by bike.

And all these pages can be searched in full using the
search engine on the front page of
the site.